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Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1863-03-28

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l.l - ' . j . i .;j.rV)4ast.-55ll U, V -r Kiwi '. 2 -V ." 71 YOLUME XXVJ. ;:'v ! .'.f. . ':r.--,ivt;, :f . t 11 f&I (f !;V : ... i , ,. . x 3' i ! .r-r-:r r r : ai I All -Ti - -0 -JL-- Jjt gtmocralic jBanittr ii muiut mir sattbdat morsisa it L. HAEPEB. ? Odee In TF outward Block, 3d Story. TERMS. Two Dollars per annum, payable in ad-aaee ; $2.0 within six month ; $3.00 after the expiration of the year. - - he Iltraocratif banner EDITED BY L. HARPER. THE SOLDIERS TO BE PAID! Good News If True. c The following comes to us in the shape of a telegraphic dispatch from Washington : Washington March 21. The Secretary of the Treasury has placed in the hands of the ' Paymaster-Genera) here a sufficient supply of money lo pay the entire army up to the 1st ofj March. Sufficient has also been pent at.d - reachoi its destination, to pay the entire Army of the West. ..... We earnestly hope that this statement may prove to be correct. It will je gratifying news to the poor soldiers, many of whom have not received a cent of pay for nearly a year ; and it will be doubly gratifying to their destitute end suHVring families. - The soldiers' wages, even if promptly and regularly paid, ar whollj inadequate for their support, especially in times like the present, when the necessaries of life and every article of clothing have fully doubled in price. We are in tavor of the jldiers' pay being increas- ed at lesst one-third more than it is at present, and as soon as the next Democratic Congress comes into power, we shall insist upon the passage of a law to reduce the jay of the offi- cers. and to increane that of the private soldiers. What say our brethren of the Democratic press to this? Incendiarism. A son. of David Iluber, of Pleasant tovrn-'eliip. remarked in the hearing of several, as we are positively informeil. that he was ready to lead a band of men to bum the houfe and ; barns of secessionists,' (meaning Dunocrata.) I this the terrible programme of the Repl.li--can U. L." thus lea keti out. by an irutirt-i-eet 'member? If it is, Democrats 'will -not'-hide ix-r -hirk, but meet the proscriptie, bloodthirsty incendiaries, with the motto of "an e for an ejre an J a tooth for a tooth." Ohio 'Eagle, ... 16? The burning of Democratic barns in . Indiana during the progress of an Abolition meeting, and the late attempt to fire the Cm is 'office at Columbus, are some of the bitter irHita ofiaiwjg a bigoted, Mgtjo", ,fnif'Cnl . .party in power, v While this state of sot;iety exists, every Democrat should be ready to defend himself and hit property at all times, to - V thertmter end." We may expect a continuation of these lawless and wicked proceedings -until Mr, Lincoln's term of office expires, when the Democracy will come into power again. We advice our friends to be patient, cool and -law-abiding; but true, determined and, coura-.. geous. ' ' ITew Democratic Paper in Washington. . Hon. Thomas B. Florence, for many years a prominent and influential Mcmier of Con gress from Philadelphia, and a Democrat of the true stamp, has commenced the publica-iion of a new Democratic paper in Washing, t on City, under the title of the Constitutional Union, which has the warm recommendation of ail the Democratic members of the late Congress.' It Ts for the present published Weekly but will be issued Daily as soon as the patron-age will warrant .it- : We- have not yet seen the paper, but the following extract from its 'eblums will iu'dicate its character: - ; : '- r Th madness and folly of abolitionism have not only involved us in a deplorable civil war ! but they have brought us to the very verge 'of anarchy ! It is the high and and hrly inis-aion of the Democracy to rescue our beloved country from the fiery abyss into which blind fanaticism and mad ambition would hurl it. And the Democracy can and will do it! Alreadv. ; in State after State, the conservative Denio- crai,c Classes have risen in the majesty of " their strength, and swept from power the black T hearted demagogogues who have prosu'tuted nign places oi trust, to subserve their own base and selfish purposes, at the expense of -T the life, and blood.-and treasure of the nation. .Two years of abolition misrule have caused the scales to drop from the eyes of many a too confiJina constituency, and they now see, in all its nakct deformity,, thia demon of abolition, which under. the gaW of Republicanium, . lays violentJianhj upon the. Constitution, and threatens to subvert the liberties of.tlie people. -The conservative masses throughout - the' land ?bave resolved to hurl the usurpers from power; ; thev handwriting is already on the wall: like the mighty a well of ocean, the heaving tide of i PemecraCT begins to move the political sea: rand soon the good old ship of State,''manned -by a brave and atoray Democratic crew; will tie' seen prondly careering over lta . placid wa- - ters, beneath bright and tranquil skies. ; Utgro Insnrreetipnary Expedition: t . . If the following extract from a letter dated - Port Royal. 14th Inst., is reliable, the .negro ' expedition fitted out by Geo.-Hunter has come to an inglorioas end " " ' ;' "! ' - I Alwfort'u'nea come not singly as . spieai biit in batuUiona.". ' Oh Thursday night a steanii er came in- from Fernandina with reports ini dicating that the force of 1.000 ascended "the St." Mary's River on the' 9tb of WfCh nad met- with a-moft severe reverse, 'and probably. had, been captured. ' ! - ' '.'.V ', , It will be reoifcroberecl . that 4 this ofce ' car- tied with it several thousand muskets for the c avowed purpose of supplying with' artns all the slaveswhom they could incite to iiisurrec tibn. fif ths report referred'lo 'should prove - true;,both the negroes and their comuiaudent. " Colonels Iliggiiisoh abd Montgomery, and all the'white ofiicers." have trobablv t een shot in ; kecordanctf with the' announcement, made by J 5 eff. Davis in his proclamation retaliatdry"on 1 .tion.'''"' --.- - . " s"-' J I vt9TA fPoftw6taatt in Brooklyn; IT.' T on 1 KiMt conitte4 th fatal mistake of ' rmV1 u'PV? th hda8e Bl "went " SSA ork-' .Dorin? ner absence the -house -took trt,xdthechifd was burned Wr deathu xne sUienry- ana t-onsenpuon. , Tb. Episcopal Recorder aq . acknowledged organ' of the Trotestant Episcopal Churchj takes' the Tollowin just and' sensible' view of the refusal of Congress 'lo:.exem'pt' clergymen from liability to the drafts s'; . .. ,' , '"Nor will there be any serioas consequences from the refusal to grant this exemption.' Wherever a minister of the Gospel is useful to his people, and preaches faithfully to them of Christ, they will gladly contribute, for his relief the three haD&r-dollars the law prescribes for commutation. Should they not be ready to do this, or should the drafted minister be without a church connection which will pay this amount for bis-discharge, we cannot see that he has any public claims to be excused from the performance of that service, which, distasteful as it may be. every loyal citizen is now called upon to render." We are willing that every truly Christian minister- shall be exempt from the coming draft ; but every one of them who has preached politics instead of the gospel of Christ, should le forced into the army, and compelled to stand in the front ranks in every battle. That is the only thing we know of that will cure them of that disease called " Nigger on the Brain." Bounty to Discharged Soldiers. The following is a copy of the sixth section of an act passed at the last session of Congress, entitled " An Act to promote the efficiency of the Corps of Engineers, and for other purposes:" '-.-.'.,;--.'. .':-:',;':.''.-: Section 6. And be it further enacted, That all payments of advanced bounties to enlisted men who have I een discharged before serving out the time required by law for its payment in full, shall be allowed in the settlement of the accounts of the paymasters at the Treasury, but hereafter, in all such cases, the amount so advanced shall le charged against the enlisted men, -unless the discharge be upon surgeon's certificate for wounds received or sickness incurred since their last enlistment. It appears from the above that those soldiers who are discharged sick or wounded, are to have the benefit , of their bounty advance without deduction, and that all other discharged soldiers are to have the advance! bounty deducted from their pay at the time of final settlement. Row in Canton Ohio. The Democrats, of Stark county had a mass meeting in Canton, on the Cth inet.. Dr. Olds and Hon. G. L. Converse were the speakers. WhiIeMr. Converse was spraking an assault was made on some Democratic boys Btanding outside of the crowd. The Democrat says, 'Pistols and knives were drawn on them, and for a few minutes the oppoer of free speech were likely to prevail. But the Democratic boys soon rallied and sweept all before them, and had it not been for older heads., would have followed up their advantage, and inflicted severer chastisement upon the gettera up of mob law..- A Democrat while standing jieaeea-b!y was stabbed in the back by a Republican youth. A young Republican, when aiming a pistol at a Democrat, was hit by a stone on the nose. The blow broke his nose and knocked him down. - These are the only casualties worth mentioning." The Soldiers Want the Abolitionists to do the Fighting. A Clermont county soldier (who was a Republican when he volunteered.) now that the war has been converted by the Abolitionists into an engine to give freedom to the slave," thinks that the Abolitionists and the niggers should be compelled to do the . fighting. A most capital idea, that! The writer says : There is great excitement aWut the President's Emancipation ; Proclamation and the bill for arming the Negroes. The latter is denounced with the bitter imprecations, and all our men swear, to a man. that they will rebel and kill every negro that is brought in. - Now, for my part, if they would place the Negroes and Abolitionists in the front and make them do all the fighting, I should not care. But so long as I ha any fighting to do I do not want either of t lief e tribes in the field, for it would be a disgrace to the arms of America. When I say thev, I mean both, Negroes and Abolitionists for I have no more respect for the one than the other if any:: difference, -I abhor the Abolitionists -most. " - - Western Cotton Speculation. A St. Louis correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette, noticing certain charges against Geni Curtis (the hero of Pea Ridge, Prairie Grove, Ilartsville and Springfield,) in connection with the cotton trade, writes as follows : I mderstand that Gen. Curtis Tina ifmaiii). eti an investigation of these matters, and it is possible that the sending of Gen. Sumner' to thia department is but temporary, and that the former officer will beTeturaed oon as the investigations are aompleted. tuuu wr iijc cxaniiaaiion inio tne CO t ton trade has not yet commenced im npxiiinna Rn McDowell having failed to appear. He is ex pected nere daily. t he other officers of the court are in tbe city and awaiting the arrival ofthe senior officer. ' ! ' 'i" : 1 Prohibition' of the- Sale of . Arms in In-; ;: ;' olaiiapolis.; ; : :'' V A dispatch to the Chicago TT&r dated Indianapolis, March 17th, .says '," l..I.V,' : Genv Carrington hasv by a general . iorder, prohibited the sale of pistols, bowie knives, arms of all sorts,1 powder, weenssion oansl and lead ' The reason given; is,r that Indiana is filled with disloyalnent-and only those to whom.hjergive special perm kit canpurchase the articles above spoken of.,, This; places the implements of war all iu the bands of parties mo;TOU;iio,Ted(Pirst A.Wew, iiampentre. tiepuUicao paper un dertakes to ' say that "copperheids" will be diafted before-Repiiblrcans, and premised,' be- ure tne election, tnai tuose wnojrpiea ine republican ticket, would be safe ronothe dra fA well-founded suspicion that favoritism of Jhat kind is to' ; ba: pntcthied.-wouli convert this epantry Int a0tbey ,;' n .yi'BrdsleSpteofiut elected by tbe Blaclr 'Tr.M.Kuwi. v-. ground with f h Democracy, &s the only pont- 'b- - preserve ta e OT arament. . ' ' " - ....,...'. . Who is Besponsible for the Present War i An Elegant and Trathral Picture. The iollowing extract is from Mr. Voda-HErs late speech in New Yorki- "We copy it because it is as true as Holy -Writ r'- ' .-'f " V Mr. Voorhees read - from - the -debates In Congress, showing that Douglas said, in the Thirty-sixth Congress that , if his party had triumphed in the last election, the people of the Southern States Would have rested in the: security that they were safe, and the Union would never have been dissolved.; Washing- I ton, Jefferson, Jackson, Clay and, Webster predicted that the- result of a sectional, party ' would be disunion and civil war, and yet the Republicans are excessively sensitive about being charged as the authors of this war. I am sure, said the speaker, if I felt that the blood of this war was iu any way on my hands, or that any vote of my hand had brought into existence this thousand miles -of graves upon the borders of the South had caused this mourning of mothers for their first-born, like Rachael weeping for her children because they are not; if I thought that I was responsible by word or deed for this war, I should feel that upon my fingers was the blood, red damned spot of murder that would incarnadine great Neptune's wave, and that all the waters in the ocean would not wash out. Great applause, and "three cheers for Voorhees, the patriot" given, heartily. There would be no res pose for me this side Or the other of the grave. I would have to have a lighted candle in my room to -keep away spectators of the murdered dead slain in battle. I thank God to night, and love to look in the faces of an audience that participate iu the feel ing, that no Democrat has to take the guilt of this great crime against nature and humanity. You know' it well that if every-body . had voted as you voted, and; talked as you talked, and minded their own business as you minded yours, and let the slave States alone in sla very, and let them have the guarantees of the Constitution- who does not know: that there would have been peace and Union before today ? - The man who pretends he don't know it falsifies his own internal convictions. Every man knows it. He who stands before you : and says it is not true don't, even represent his own heart. It is an instinctive feeling in your breast, and you know it. Consequently; when you ask this question of Republicans, how anxious, nervous, and sensitive they are; ; how ouicklv thev out un their hands and sav. vLet's argue this question when the war is 'over;' it is like Banquo s ghost threatening Macleth. 1 heir eyeballs are seared by he awful eight. They afck that the day of reckoning may be postponed: like some guilty wretch upon the verge of hell ileelf. they nay, 'Forbear a few days: let us not discuss these questions npw." How loving they are with Democrats that will give them time with men who w:ll agree to say, " We will speak of these things when the war is over." Ah, gentlemen, short accounts and quick settlements are lest. tireat cheering. I propose to settle this account all aloi.g the line. It is beet to do so, because they will be asking us to trust them again directly.: How Lincoln Inculcated "Treason." It is oftenjsaid that Calhoun instilled iu-to the public mind, the doctrines from which has sprung "the heresy of secession." The following shows that the responsibility docs uot rest on Calhoun alone: Any people, anywhere, being inclined and havingthe power, have the right to rise up and shake of the existing-Government, and form anew one that suits them better. This is a most valuable, a most sacred right a right which, we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. A'or is this right confined to case in which the whole people of an existing Government may choose lo exercise it. As v portion of such people that can mav revolutionize and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit. More than this: a majority of any portion of such people may revolu lionize; putting down a minority intermingled with or near about them, who may oppose their movements. Such minority was precisely the case of the Tories of our own revolution. It is a quality of revolutions not to go by old lines or old laws, but to break up both and make new ones. Extract from J'resid'ent JAncoln's speech in the House of Representative", January 12A, 1848. See Appendix to Congress sional Globe, first session, Thirtieth Congress, page A Great Outrage on the Tapis in Co- lumbns. ; ..- : ; Yesterday Mr. Dressel, one of the Representatives from the county of Franklin, offered a series of resolutions iu the Ohio House of Representative. They are substantially those adopted by the Democracy of Connecticut, at their State Convention at "Hartford, : a few weeks ago, which resolutions - were published in the Enquirer at the time. The resolutions will be indorsed by the people of Connecticut, at the coming April election, by the choice of the Democratic ticket by a large majority . These resolutions, which are thus approved by a New England State, were made the occasion of a gross Insult to the ' principle of a representative Government.- One1 West, of Logan county, who was defeated for Congress io his district last fall, who is repudiated by the people, had the audacity to, offer a resolution expelling Mr, Dressel from his .seat, for favoring the resolution of the people of Connecticut. We do not recollect of such a proposal ever Wing offered to a legislative body as that of West. If it should be adopted, tt would be a terrible blow at representative popular Government..; Jfihema,orityTcan expel a minority because they do not like their . sentiments, then onr legislative bodies are a.gross humbug, and we shall never have another one entire in Ohio. , The Ohio Legislature has as much right to make a King, aa they have to expel MrvDresel-for bis resolutions., ,Tbe idea that the fastidious majority shouldlbraud as " disloyal" resolutions that are approved by , th people of such a State s Connecticut, is rich extremely so I ,;We wait, the upshot of ibis matter with great interest.;. H the Ohjo Legislature can't stand upon the .platfbriu. of Connecticut, it bad better at once com home and go to Africa. . Ohio more extreme, than Coneciicnt-that ia a good joke 1CineiMaU 1 Francia P.- Blair, the Father of the Prea-! ent Pbstmaater iGexieral, Vpdn the Free- 'dota'of.th'e-Presi: -' v-; ; . "MPa, no PQssiBta axiauavcr, xoiTxYtv ""oOEAMlDTIIE THROES OF CIVIL ,WAR, eoa.tAi Ctopemment fystjfy official tnterfitrew i freedom of;$peeck or oj we press iT noas THAN IT CAN wiTHc,IH raiKDOM orjjutBAJUtpt.iJrha.. licentiousnesa or the tongue and of ibe pen is ,a Ktvoa fttit. COXPAUD WITH TB LICXNTI0CSNSS9 Or AK9I- faaar rowaa." F. B. Blair senior. : iThe.kboaiJ editorial article,, which, appeared in the Wwh- isgtoo Glo&, when U was edited by- FaANdis P. ExAia,ln the days of Jxcisoss'-'Adiaii)i- ;'-t&? English meq-bf-war nayeptured lbree slavers on be-eoaab ,of, Africaj 'j. je" Garibaldi haa.issujpd.an apppeal to Europe, the burden of which is "-Donot abandou1 poiandrv, :;j".:.;-,t1:.,:,: M&t.Gen. Scbenek hasi issued : an order for bidding the sale of secession tuuaie in the city of Baltimore, i huu": -,:'. ; . .; S&- Hon. Joh'tt W-. Noetli.of Missouri, member, of the late House ' ot Representatives, has just died. ' . .- .' ' .'; ; ; I Tbe Spanish O'Dbnnell cabinet dissolved on the 26 of Feb. Duero ia the new' Pres ident of the Council." :i - - ; ; ::': ' jSQr The.Governor of Wisconsin has-received urgent requests for more medical aid lor the troops before Vicksburg. ' ! . . aT Thad. rttevens was rotten-egged on his return to his constitnents ra Lancaster, Pa. after the adjournment of Congress. aThe Pittsburg Gazette says that troops are going Westward, supposed to be for the re-inforcement of Rcsecraus. ' " ': ' It is. reported that a son of old Aloli- tlOll -i saint, John . Brown, has been hunz at Vicksburg. :t ' ",;.'-:-: '-... t&m 'The President has approved of the sentence of the Court-martial to shoot soldiers for desertion. - , ST"The Quakers of Indiana have paid two hundred and fifty thousand dollars into the U. S. Treasury for exemption from military duty. JtfaS Accordiug to the Van Wyck report, the income of the Collector of the port of N. York for one year will be $lirt,508".51. Paris and London are said to be full of women of rank intriguing against any interference wth "the settlement of the Polfahrebellion.- ' . ". ;- t&m Washington dispatch reports the Government hard at work selecting officers for the execution of the Conscription act. . The Hagerstown (Md.) . Press has been suppressed by order of General Schenck, and its editor, Mr. A. J. Boyd, sent beyond the federal lines. ,; J" Parson Brownlow realize! from the sale of his book, within ninety days, over $17,000, which sum whs paid over) to him by his pub-liher,.Geo. W. Child. , ; t he ?SMwbuck Rangers" are a boly of men in uraini Kapids, A1k-u., who go round and saw wood for women whose supporters are at war. . ,j, . . , S& A considerable amount of.real estate in Cincinnati, belonging u Albert, Win.-A. and Thom8 J, Jenkins, oflSeers iri the rebel army, has been seized by the TX & Marshal. 4 The Louisville Journal says: Our State is a unit in itn devotioii' to the Union cause, and the great principles which are involved in passing events. f-V! V ' IS?" A tiger got out oft; his cage and took a leisurely-walk in Cinciijpikti lately, frightening a woman badly . by trying to get into her kitchen., ; ! '' 1 . B-Gerrit Smith has contributed $500 to-; ward raisins a regiment of negro troops in Mas-i sachusetts, and offers $3000 more for the sanie purpose in New York. B The anniversary of Washington's birthday was celebrated in London by a banquet at St. James' Hall, at which over one hundred persons were present. The rebel Gen. Longstreet's headquarters are at Petersburg: Va. He has eighteen thousand troops twelve tuiles tLis side, near the Black water. A" special to the Detroit Free Press says Gen. Bnrnside is again in command of the Otli Army Corps, having arrived at Newport News on the Cth inst. 8 The Richmond Examiner contains the announcement that Gen. Beauregard has revo ked all futloughi and recalled the absentees to their. posts. .; ; t& A correspondent of the Allen Co. Democrat urges the nomination of Hon. Allen G. Thurmanas the Democratic candidate forGovr ernor of Ohio. : jB Charter elections just held at Rock Island, IU., and Davenport and Muscatine, Iowa, have gone m favor of the Democrats. Revo lutions never go backward. . . t& The President baa appointed Andrew Wylie a Judge of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, notwithstanding his re jection, by the Senate. XNin"tbousan"d pounds of lint and bandages have been collected in Frankfort on the Main, Germany, and forwarded to this country for the use of the wounded Union soldiers. . : J Three members of. the Pittsburgh bar nave been stricken from the list of practising attorneys because they neglected to take out licenses as required by the internal revenue law- ; ' - ; . ;" - -' ISF Gen: Grant has ordered all resigned of- ueers and discharged soldiers to leave the department of the Mississippi., as, oa examination, the cotton disease has been discovered on many of them. : ':. " .' : '. ;.r : JTbe Government, it is reported, contemplates establishing at Washington or Annapolis, a cam p of instruction for 100,000 men an indication of a purpose to put in force the con- SCriptiou laWrl . ';;,- ; ., .... M&" The Chattenooflr Rebel states that the wife of Gen. John C Breckinridge baa made a set of colors from her wedding dress, to be pre sented to the bravest regiment.in ber husband's division.,. . .. ; -. : .. . .'. ' ;' t The Portland Press, like other niggfr-headpapersi has been calling every Democrat a rebel. But its noisv mouth' will be stopped for the present by lbel auit and an" attach-went of $10,000.' : ?--.- ;. ,:k.w-..;.. ; ; WST Gen. WHgbt has prohibited the sale of arms' and; ammunition ' in Cincinnati, excebt ""POu.special permit. Any' violation will be foilowed-hy confiscation of goods and stock of the vendor. " . ; ' .. v ! , t A rebel lleufenanf, capfufel in vicinity of Charleston, says that Becret pegotuitions for Ejace have been progressing for three weeks at iebmoud, but the papers are 'not' allowed, to aiiude to the fact i, ur ' 'r 'i. We learubU Con o ty,. subpoenaed Governor Tod laifweek to appear on Monday next, before the Grand Jn rrofl bat' county, to testify, iulregard to the ai5-MrPrOIds.SST Tlie officer who called the roll of tbe paroled Federal soUira4a-Houston, Texaa, was Lieut. Todd; brother .of Airs. Lincoln, who is discribed as uU, fat, and aavage again tbe Yankeeal'V -. ' y . ?Ji I ..l-". ! ' I f t3 The receni" draft in MTcbigan caused qnite a" livery migration? io Canada." From Clinton county, the St. Jonn's ipuaatitaes, out oforfywis-wbtf'wMa drafted.'not over one-third tii within tha 6beri2a graspV4 VI i' "tcf'lni"ce'trteJ' beiofeiJu3geCrferJ,x in Philadelphia'; he decided that if rebels on- land were treated as prisoners cf war, rebels on the sea were entitled to the Sne w: z and were therefore act eaiject io th penalties of f iracy. Tit fieutUxat or tbe New Ealsuicl -? "shfTi'si 3cxatoeinae7'' .i.x-o-Va tr" ThePoUUcal.f Can W ,: ia, . qoncQticut. storation' of the Union by Peaceful :.! t-,- . .-,..! in Means - -j M- S E E E G H HON, TEOHAS H. SEYMOUR, DEMOCRATIC, (CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR -V I ' OF. . COJfJiECTICUT, At 'Harfjfrd, on Wednesday Evening March 11. ; . From the New Ilaveo (Conn.) RegUter. J Gintlivbx : When I came leforeyou some time since, I spoke to you of the duty which it seemed to. me devolveit upon us "in the present crisis, and I spoke also of the events which bad brought this crisis upon . ua.; - At that time I stood before yon in the capacity of one of the rank and file. ' Applause: Since then I have been promoted to a place on rour State ticket.' This is a ereat honor. I can assure you, and one wjiljh Xmosthighly.appreciate, and not the lesaVo on" ac'-bttnt of'tbe trials it brings with it. - Whatever iltee trials may be,.I give you my word, fellow-citizens, that I shall bear them without a murmer. In entering upon the struggle which is before us, and which it is manifent.'' to 'be a severe one,' I am not to forget that U-'is boause of mine, btlt it is your cause, and mine and yours together Applause.- And lielieviog U tq be. jufit and upright,' I can uot for a ntomeirt believe that there is to be any failure alout it - Cheers.. The voice that conies on a breeze to us from New Hampshire cheers tell ,ns, -"We have done what we could for the cause, and it id for you now t take up that cause and carry it on and cover yourselves with imperishable glory.' Great applause.; .-;,'.,- -: . Gentleiiien, I have spoken on the, '-c.rius. in our affairs. The world has' never seen one exactly like' it.- Our rights J have been taken a way by. arbitrary power. , The sword and bludgeon have been called in to effect . these most wicked outrages. What have we to. oppose them ? The ballot only ; but the ballot is mightier-than kings. Applause. The poet has well described how it , ' . "As lightly tallf An snow-flakes full upon tbe sod,' ' ' ' ;"; But executes a fremaa'8 wilL M.;r : - As lightning doe the will of God Great cheering. : ' - :'..'---.-.' .- Nov my friends, what ia requrred of us at this juncture of our affairs ? 1 address myself t nd isc r i m i n at el y . t o al 1 t h ose w h o ha y e en 1 is t ed under our banner to those who have enlisted under our Itanner for the vigorous proecutidn of peace. Great applause. 'is What is required of us, I say ? 'Perfect freedom of speech, abnegation of self, elf-positessiony steadinetu of purpose, and a firm an analterable resolution to stand by the Constitution and the laws. Well now, your declarations, my friends, in regard to these ereat objects of your party or ganization, as expressed iri the prbceeiinga of your convention, have raised a storm about your heads, and it is raging at tbe present time. I am glad that is so. ' I seein the very fury of the gale the means of "ileliyeranceJ Applaui-e. Gentlemen. I crossed the Black Sea once in a fearful tempest a tempest that sent thewavea chasing after us like so many fiends ; but it was the wild winds that drove away the mist then along the coast, and opened to our view the anchorage of the Bospho-rus. If it had not been for the gale, we might have drifted toward "the .Asiatic coast and leen caught between the Sy m plegades. Now, the rage of man is as the raging sea, and those that fear either will not do. to pursue the leviathan under the tropics,: or to grapple with the hvdra of Federal A lolitionisni. Applause." '-: ' '''' . . Gentlemen, the "doings of voiir convention have .my hearty approval. They have calleil out all the bitterness of the opposition. Now. it is lamentable that there should t so much bitterneHs at the present day," .but" I suppose that it cannot very .'well : be helped. -: J f. you and tkose. associated with you in drafting your resolutions had glossed. oyer the atrocious doings of. the men in power, If you had compromised with your1 consciences anil found an excuse here aud an apology there for what had been done, you : might .'have passed muster with the men in power, and been voted" patriots of the second water, if not of the first. But my friends, it is better as it is. Who noble ends by noble means would obtain should not count the Cost of the struggle. ' Who would win the crown mnst first wrestle with wild beasts at Ephesus, and I therefore rejoice that you have taken your stand in favor of Slate rights and constitutional rights, and that you are determined to maintain these. Applause. .Do this, and you shall recover your liberties. (Great applause. ; . Fail to do this, and you will be crushed between, the upper and nether mill-stone. Now, gentlemen, another thing; ince you have coine out thus boldly, as yoa have done, the old talk is reviving here h (his community ahont loyal aixl disloyal, and testa of this kind are applied to one and another in the community. ' ' " ' Now, those who use these Words, ' in ; scorn or in hatred of you, either do not know tbe true, origin and application of these words, or they are troubled - with . what is called . the King's Evil.".- Laughter. . Sir. what have loyal or disloyal lojdo with our ; institutions ? They.,are hot indlgineoca to otir soil, any more than the Canada thistle or the deadly Upas. When the Americans east off' the British yoke, they banquishel the Words loyal" and Vdis teyal," from our political bible. . They are not to be found either in the Constitution of ypur country or in the M psalm" of Jefferson - and liberty."-; But I will tell yon where you mar find : them t . In .the proclamations, of Xccd Hqwc, and Cornwallisp and Clinton - and in their orders which gave the Jersey's and the Carolinas to fire and sword : and if you look furtlier, you may pneaibl-r-find ;tbein: in 'the .death-Warrant: which . consigned the . martyt Hale to an ignominious crave. vWe-. are not called upon to jndu.lJLnahyJJsuch "language as this. Devotion to the Constitution end the Union of onrwuntfy is the setftiment of our heart, and is all that we- are Called 'upon to render. i As for those other words of treason? and ";.traitor,,,,i which political. ; hatred le eon stantjy casting -lo Jtbe faces of patriotic, libertyr loving'men; they are of little pr no account excepiinsr when the Ivine tongue may expose mine Jadi vidua! to odium br positive injury. t I n each case :let the ! traducers . beware.- : Unt, my mends, asam, the doingr or your Convention have ralseXa clamor in . this and other communities, the . amount bf which - is that you are about ta inangnrate a civili war hi the country; Now, then we will take care that there shall be .no: civil, war applause, and we will take care; that the people, have their rights,! Great applause'. Whomever heard of peace measures proyoking5 war -and bloodshed ? i'Tbese tnen.T fear, are I trouble! with distempered fancies: - They bave bad o much to do with tlood-lettinjr that it seerns to hare decolored ererythin about them: If thev recall the mission of Wiliiara';Tenn they wil be apt tq conclude that peace mearurea. alter all, are aot eo very bad. - When he came to the banka of the Delaware; 1t waa a wild country. ;Tbere- he found a war-like tribe 1 who had been, butchering each other,, time out of mind; scalping each other, knocking out each other's brains. ; War lo them was a pastime, and blood tbe incense of their lives. The story ie a touching one. A grave man, animated by the true spirit oi philauthrophy, went ia among tbe redjnen and talked lo them as a, friend.' -. He got them together in council; be breathed into them something of the divine principle of charity was in him.- They listened to him as cue sent ty the Great Spirit, end all at once he held them, as! it were, in the hollow of bis band. . Involuntarily- they laid down, their arms, they buried the hatchet and forever alter ceased to make:, war , upon each other, ' . . ; . '-.. : But these men that have traduced jou, ypar principles and your intentions, have conveyed the idea, or sought to convey the idea, that, if the Democratic party, could get power as I have no doubt they are about" to do this great cheering the laws are to be overturned, A h I it is a libel on a great,- and . numerous, and patriotic party. Their history is that of a law-abiding party, as you, gentlemen, both of you (turning to Mr. Toucey and Mr, Eaton,) very well know. If the old Whig party. were in existence, they would tell : you so. They will do nothing when in power, either to grieve the living or sully the memory of tbe dead. . Let our conservativefellow-citi-aens, mea of property, give no heetl to rumors aiw declarations of this sort, but believe that, in UiCj, event of any such triumph of the. party to- which, JL refer, the. la we will be maintained, and that equal and exact justice will be meted out to meu.ofjalIpartie8,aml.sectsr- and pur-suasions. Great.-apoIauseJ . , r , Another.! lung.. 4 They, talk to ns .pf .Gov- ernmeiu, , 4.hev wl efnmfii.i ii means., .ir.it means , sjiy thing at alli'that we are to support this "Administra tion right or .$rong; ril that IdOjiqt intend to do. Great cheering- ; t.canV'seerwheu' we can make a distinction between wbui is-callel the uoi-erninent and what is done' outside of Government. There are several kinds of government. There is that of the Sultan of Turkey. a.Governnwnt of the one man power-He may'send his niiites with tlje bow-string to throttle thoe whom he fears .or bates, or he may tie up his. women in sacks and throw them into the - Bosphorus. There are other government whose meo-ia power act independent, qfany law, exceU the law oi; their pwp breathy and a higher law, which is not known to patriots."'' Theif there 'is the" constituttonal form of govern tfient, -"under which I Was born, w'hich; I ; hare ; supported,- a nd under, which, when. my. time cpm.es. I . would wish to;die-JApplause. iKow, although. .the Sultaq "of Til r key may do what he 'pleases "withoutbe'"? called to account forit," there is no'such Immunity for a ruler - under ' a republican form-of government. Whatever is done in accordance with the Constitution of the United States is the Government and a portion of bur national life, and whatever is done contrary to that Consti tntion is no Government at alC' such as our fathers. established, but a wicked usurpa tion. v (Cheers. J . W here are we at the present day ? '.All the most valuable rights of the citizens, those especially that are set forth in the twelve amendments of the Constitution, have been swept away by the "men inpow'er,"and to day.. L. lament to be obliged to say .' it, to. day we are living under a different form of government than - that? which our fathers founded and sealed with their blood. Our remedy for present ftbnses is not in revolution ary proceedings, tmt : in the exercise of the right oi ballot of which. I have just spoken. Now. gentlemen, 1 see. around me quite a numtier ot naturalized citizens, and 1 wish to say a few' words to them. The time has come when we may speak plainly to each other. I ak you, my friendei, what' induced you to this country? To escape tyranny." . 4 Don't think in e impertinent for asking you the question and givinyou .the answer to t myself. Why did von leave the Khrme and the Rhone and the borders of Lake Geneva? - Why did vou leave Neufehate) and Constance? Why did you leave the Elbe and the Scheldt ami the Hagus? Why did you leave the sunny Italy, the scene of civil war for more than a hundred years, and why the vine-clad hills of France?: Why did vou leave Caledouia, " stern and wild." and sweet lakes that nestle in the bosom of hills? Why did you leave Killarnev and Kilkenny, and those consecra ted places where Curran and G rattan thunder- , ' . . T . 1 1 T . I. -J ea against nppremon, anu wuere iimmn miu down bis life? Applause. Why did you leave the graves of your kindred in the rath erland, "the God's acre"; of Germany, and the church-yards of the United Kingdom? Why did you leave the historic scenes of the Old World, where the Roman, tbe Northman, and the blue-eyed Goth have been, and where they have left the iiaprects of their moral power, or of brute ; lorce cenes w here. A have . sometimes stood, as it were, entranced, till I seem ed to be incorporated with the pa?t, while the ages surged by me? 1 Why" did you leave the bright, the beautiful, the tender, the touch ing, the sublime why did you leave all .these tor.the New. World?. Better, perhaps. I have sometimes inongut in tnese days ot trial, that the good ship in which you embarked had been stranded en the French, tbe German, ; or the Irish coat, and yon plucked from he remorseless wave not leas; cruel and remorseless tha"n;the. wrath of map-bave retnmed to your native villagn. there to Uke up the burr den of life again; better this than that you should have come here just to taste the sweets of liberty, and all at once' bare the cup dashed from yoeHips.i Applause.? : . - . .-; I, And now formy answer, ;? Yo.q. came . here to get rid of unjust law. of odious taxes "that take frt)b; the'ojouth of labor'the bread which; it has earned,"4d getxISTor iarge-v armies and navies nareatTux tne suoscance ot xueJ people; lo get Hd iof Mantp actsr and conscription mctt to be rid-of Provost Marshals, andgame-keeperaand bum bsjliffs. tbe instruments of tne ironyuie. lureat applause.- jcou came hither fo get 'nd oi.aivile syetem..of -espionage for which otiiblanguagBbas no'name, ' arid"'to! get'rid Of tbe passport system ' that stope yooi at every frontier town.tiTl ;yohr";passport can be'yised'and Stamped. 'Vou- came iwbere speech waajfree and tb press free; where there, was trial bVJnry; where labor. . waV honored; an.d man; the lprd of his little patch of ground j Or it mnf be, ef bis acres, could take hie -ehib, dreo jn-biraruSa and thank God that, he was loru ia land of, freedom j Great : cheering. This, is what you. .came, for, And , vou" came wherei civil and religious liberty; had found an asylum, and reared her temples to justice abd to the worship of the living God.-VBot; men of foreigo-landj.yoawherH I-have sometimes welcomed to oar shores; 'LT aro ibonnd,' to till you that in some thiu" you have been misled lately, deceived1, beguiled, and cast, as it were, into the horrille pit,'"Io7;the last . vesr a yearwh'ch "o-its violation ot personal iI,i3 aud -dleregard of corsJitational ctliations, should be stricken frop the calender the ci?n in power disregarding tLe rights of the rcja under tbe Constitution, have struck oc,'ia . say , vou. must, support the vernment. oir. I undent mk! nerfectlv well i at is meant by 'this cryV Support the Gov- a succession of oiitrn, I1ai m... right which you have acquired here, aud the r o . j . bare renewed here in Onr' Country some of the worst featurea,. ot the rotten) dy nasties ofo- t - ropean auu vsiauo coontri.es. -- Ana now, gentlemen, your remedy in In tnnr Awn hanrta - : United together, 'and firm in your purpose, Vhl, . . L . , t 1 , ' jv" recover iok which you . save lost, and recover these inevitable privileges in ' constitutional way. c-r. -".,--."'.' uentiemen of the different clnba for rUD-poee you are reniMni.l i. t . organization the noble impulse, the patriotio pnrpw.es, the holy aspiration and heroic resolve which have characterized the true friend of liberty in all ages of tbe world. Your late tyiHcuiiuu was , remaraauie one. Every town in the State wa n.n.ni tl:. il . - ja a a a, Uta mm something which has never occurred before. XT I . I i . r . , - n w iu explanation a oimcuit one. xivery town has suffered more or less, by.the war. Exery town has seen on the edge of its horizon the shadows of some" coming despotism! Every-town has eiven something of the flow of its . youth to the causes Some have re turned criDhled for life; At he rat n a va rnA Klr - to tell the story of how they were treated by iuubc wuu auuaiu nave pecn to mem irienos and protectors. 'Every : town ; is loaded with taxes.- In all of them there ia mnn m leak mourn in ir. . Rachel innin r. and refusmir to be comforted hnan the r are not; and all of, this misery, desolation, burthen and omreaa?nn fnr tK f .t;! w - v m mm w waatflat Va "aVS a W cal Abolitionism." fApplaose.l Now. gentlemen, a word or two more and I have done. What is tbe mission of tbe hour? It 18 to IDeak (tnl: Unit cnaalr r.1a!.l. - I I only that, but to speak the whole truth; and If aAn Jm. at.!. 1 . i juu uu .uia, jou nay say mat we have gone far enough in a unprofitable and cruel struggle. "It. is .time to sheath the sword and spare mankind.": Great cheering "Already have our quarrels filled tbe world with widows and orphans." But perhaps you may say .to me some of you we. are to gain by this StrniTCfle. And therefnr it all uain what? Ifyou eonauer the South. ou have got to keep an army there to hold them, ia Subri aeat nn. And pay for itK : If you , devastate the South and turn the African loose, you destroy that Portion 'of VOu'r country whih Wna borne market, and convert it into' a desert. ie it liberty that jou aie to gain?, t Alas Kray friends, you have well ni?h by permitiingthe military to .override the civ? 11 power": Depend upon it, in such a contest as this at the present time, there can be but one end, and that will be despotism fori yourselves and -your, children. The bnlv hope ia in & return to mirnl vm,,ao1. . V. n .1 V, fro forth from' one end nf tl Tan.t ik. 43 Mfmj fcajag VbUw er, we have bad enough of thia death struggled -::::A ' : I,,"..- :- J . P11? wal to be done,, they may. say,- after ypu get a-cessation of bostilities? "We can not perhaps, penetrate the future and be able. to' see et this nioment what can brehould be done. But allay the, passions which war engenders, aud we shall be at no loestofind away. God help ua, ..Applause. It is not bv force oi. arms that we are to have another Union, but, by force of reason.-r Reason hides' herself in these ilaya, a poor, naked, shivering thing, a-mid thepeltingof the storm-' Go toyoatarmy :nd th y will i!l you they have had enough' ot slaughter. Braveueu will tell you. tbisV There has has not - one.-battle been since the war begun, whether; in their favor or agathst them, that doubts have notariaen in their mindi as to the possibility; of conquering the South.' Some of them remember what Chatham said of the rebellious colonies. : . They could not forgeW! either, nor should we forget, that the men on' the other side of the "rhvidious fine" are ot1 our own kindred also, and, reflecting on these things, these men of wlvom I am. speaking who aret many of them, looking toVConnectr cut and hoping for a Democratic triumph here Applause these men began to doubt the morale of the war." Is it for freedom, or is it (he work of Cain in a multiplied, vast, and fear-; ful form? The pulpit may push it on, but the words of Christ shall rebuke the pulpit's thunder "Blessed are the peace-makers, for they shall be called the children Of God." Tremendous Applause. - ; - . . Gentlemen, I congratulate you on this out-, poring of the Democracy of the Valley of the Conrtecticut, and on tbe pleasure we have bad listening to a gentleman (Mr. Toucey), who ia an honor to our native State. Great cheering The shafts of the opposition have been cast a-gainst him in yain, and he stands before us to night the true and tried" Triend of Con-stitutioual liberty, of the Union and of hts country cheers: and the speech- which be has given us on this occasion shall outlive the malice of h is detractors, 1 and form a bright" chapter in his unsullied history. Great cheering. And, recalling what baa been said in injury of him, and the attacks which have beeln made upon our friends for the part . they, hare taken in the struggle of the last few months and, in consideration of the change - in public opinion that is going on around us, 'I call to mind the language of favorite poet: . s ThoBgb thoesbts brood o'e the part, oar eyae o With smiling features glUten , i - n For Io! our day bants j tn ekj! ,-- 1 1 ' '. - " Lean oat your seoLi a(t liabjo.' : . f ' . '. '. - - The world rotli freedom's jjufient ware, " ' And ripens with ber sorrow. " ,..---.;Eop heart who bear tbe eross.to-day - . Shall wear the ctown to-morrow." : - '' ' ' - - i- . .. - .. . : , jOreat and continued cheering. : , Tlie chairman then steppe! forward with yery pretty boqu'et in bis band, received from' two young ladies in the aulience as patriot-' ie as they were beaut Uul-r-and presented it io' Covernof Seymonr, with the remark: ,.r .,.f-- "I am reouested lv" "BOnie vnnnir ladlea tn the house to tender you this boquet. io the Inll and confident belief that before the flowers fade, voa will benefited .a.uo niming wijoerneu wim three cheers for the Consthuuori and the Union, three 'cheer for Mr. Toucry.'and thefee1i:i wi....if uorerngr oi voaaecticut." . i- .-. T, - J A regular live Atnertoan Varta mm mjt classic fame and iheaiaiionaJ emblem of liber-ty b-a found its way to abis city.' and baa leeii purchased by "one of our prominest iti-teua, forjresenttion to the Milwaakee Denv-oeratioCfabi -The bead of the-Urd-i8 shi-" ning cbpr dor; hdliejmam-ea; eight iet - from tinio tin Tha . nrMD t Lirtn ' nf . arlilrK due notice will be giveo, is .to bacebmpaaied! J -"V..V. ewaira V UW I. U4 VIA Mst. V4 bUVUi - tDTbe Manchester fjN.il.) i-ror,nepuV; lican. expresses the opinion that CoJ. J...SU " CheDey, the Democrat candidate for Eillr; X . Com mission et,' is elect ed. AS there "were lit 1 two candidates for thia o See. this - resist -w;.T afTorlj perhap. the mostdecUive.t:;S cf.Ci pouiic? cf the.Siate. C61. "iTarnes B. Fry, cf tLe rtj Ute of Euerastafr I'.a t;ra x ; - ' rt-.Vsrs'.&I Cerrr- '.r t1- C law, and U to rr-h ; ta t --cistzic his suboruT&aXa c-lc. i. - " ' t

l.l - ' . j . i .;j.rV)4ast.-55ll U, V -r Kiwi '. 2 -V ." 71 YOLUME XXVJ. ;:'v ! .'.f. . ':r.--,ivt;, :f . t 11 f&I (f !;V : ... i , ,. . x 3' i ! .r-r-:r r r : ai I All -Ti - -0 -JL-- Jjt gtmocralic jBanittr ii muiut mir sattbdat morsisa it L. HAEPEB. ? Odee In TF outward Block, 3d Story. TERMS. Two Dollars per annum, payable in ad-aaee ; $2.0 within six month ; $3.00 after the expiration of the year. - - he Iltraocratif banner EDITED BY L. HARPER. THE SOLDIERS TO BE PAID! Good News If True. c The following comes to us in the shape of a telegraphic dispatch from Washington : Washington March 21. The Secretary of the Treasury has placed in the hands of the ' Paymaster-Genera) here a sufficient supply of money lo pay the entire army up to the 1st ofj March. Sufficient has also been pent at.d - reachoi its destination, to pay the entire Army of the West. ..... We earnestly hope that this statement may prove to be correct. It will je gratifying news to the poor soldiers, many of whom have not received a cent of pay for nearly a year ; and it will be doubly gratifying to their destitute end suHVring families. - The soldiers' wages, even if promptly and regularly paid, ar whollj inadequate for their support, especially in times like the present, when the necessaries of life and every article of clothing have fully doubled in price. We are in tavor of the jldiers' pay being increas- ed at lesst one-third more than it is at present, and as soon as the next Democratic Congress comes into power, we shall insist upon the passage of a law to reduce the jay of the offi- cers. and to increane that of the private soldiers. What say our brethren of the Democratic press to this? Incendiarism. A son. of David Iluber, of Pleasant tovrn-'eliip. remarked in the hearing of several, as we are positively informeil. that he was ready to lead a band of men to bum the houfe and ; barns of secessionists,' (meaning Dunocrata.) I this the terrible programme of the Repl.li--can U. L." thus lea keti out. by an irutirt-i-eet 'member? If it is, Democrats 'will -not'-hide ix-r -hirk, but meet the proscriptie, bloodthirsty incendiaries, with the motto of "an e for an ejre an J a tooth for a tooth." Ohio 'Eagle, ... 16? The burning of Democratic barns in . Indiana during the progress of an Abolition meeting, and the late attempt to fire the Cm is 'office at Columbus, are some of the bitter irHita ofiaiwjg a bigoted, Mgtjo", ,fnif'Cnl . .party in power, v While this state of sot;iety exists, every Democrat should be ready to defend himself and hit property at all times, to - V thertmter end." We may expect a continuation of these lawless and wicked proceedings -until Mr, Lincoln's term of office expires, when the Democracy will come into power again. We advice our friends to be patient, cool and -law-abiding; but true, determined and, coura-.. geous. ' ' ITew Democratic Paper in Washington. . Hon. Thomas B. Florence, for many years a prominent and influential Mcmier of Con gress from Philadelphia, and a Democrat of the true stamp, has commenced the publica-iion of a new Democratic paper in Washing, t on City, under the title of the Constitutional Union, which has the warm recommendation of ail the Democratic members of the late Congress.' It Ts for the present published Weekly but will be issued Daily as soon as the patron-age will warrant .it- : We- have not yet seen the paper, but the following extract from its 'eblums will iu'dicate its character: - ; : '- r Th madness and folly of abolitionism have not only involved us in a deplorable civil war ! but they have brought us to the very verge 'of anarchy ! It is the high and and hrly inis-aion of the Democracy to rescue our beloved country from the fiery abyss into which blind fanaticism and mad ambition would hurl it. And the Democracy can and will do it! Alreadv. ; in State after State, the conservative Denio- crai,c Classes have risen in the majesty of " their strength, and swept from power the black T hearted demagogogues who have prosu'tuted nign places oi trust, to subserve their own base and selfish purposes, at the expense of -T the life, and blood.-and treasure of the nation. .Two years of abolition misrule have caused the scales to drop from the eyes of many a too confiJina constituency, and they now see, in all its nakct deformity,, thia demon of abolition, which under. the gaW of Republicanium, . lays violentJianhj upon the. Constitution, and threatens to subvert the liberties of.tlie people. -The conservative masses throughout - the' land ?bave resolved to hurl the usurpers from power; ; thev handwriting is already on the wall: like the mighty a well of ocean, the heaving tide of i PemecraCT begins to move the political sea: rand soon the good old ship of State,''manned -by a brave and atoray Democratic crew; will tie' seen prondly careering over lta . placid wa- - ters, beneath bright and tranquil skies. ; Utgro Insnrreetipnary Expedition: t . . If the following extract from a letter dated - Port Royal. 14th Inst., is reliable, the .negro ' expedition fitted out by Geo.-Hunter has come to an inglorioas end " " ' ;' "! ' - I Alwfort'u'nea come not singly as . spieai biit in batuUiona.". ' Oh Thursday night a steanii er came in- from Fernandina with reports ini dicating that the force of 1.000 ascended "the St." Mary's River on the' 9tb of WfCh nad met- with a-moft severe reverse, 'and probably. had, been captured. ' ! - ' '.'.V ', , It will be reoifcroberecl . that 4 this ofce ' car- tied with it several thousand muskets for the c avowed purpose of supplying with' artns all the slaveswhom they could incite to iiisurrec tibn. fif ths report referred'lo 'should prove - true;,both the negroes and their comuiaudent. " Colonels Iliggiiisoh abd Montgomery, and all the'white ofiicers." have trobablv t een shot in ; kecordanctf with the' announcement, made by J 5 eff. Davis in his proclamation retaliatdry"on 1 .tion.'''"' --.- - . " s"-' J I vt9TA fPoftw6taatt in Brooklyn; IT.' T on 1 KiMt conitte4 th fatal mistake of ' rmV1 u'PV? th hda8e Bl "went " SSA ork-' .Dorin? ner absence the -house -took trt,xdthechifd was burned Wr deathu xne sUienry- ana t-onsenpuon. , Tb. Episcopal Recorder aq . acknowledged organ' of the Trotestant Episcopal Churchj takes' the Tollowin just and' sensible' view of the refusal of Congress 'lo:.exem'pt' clergymen from liability to the drafts s'; . .. ,' , '"Nor will there be any serioas consequences from the refusal to grant this exemption.' Wherever a minister of the Gospel is useful to his people, and preaches faithfully to them of Christ, they will gladly contribute, for his relief the three haD&r-dollars the law prescribes for commutation. Should they not be ready to do this, or should the drafted minister be without a church connection which will pay this amount for bis-discharge, we cannot see that he has any public claims to be excused from the performance of that service, which, distasteful as it may be. every loyal citizen is now called upon to render." We are willing that every truly Christian minister- shall be exempt from the coming draft ; but every one of them who has preached politics instead of the gospel of Christ, should le forced into the army, and compelled to stand in the front ranks in every battle. That is the only thing we know of that will cure them of that disease called " Nigger on the Brain." Bounty to Discharged Soldiers. The following is a copy of the sixth section of an act passed at the last session of Congress, entitled " An Act to promote the efficiency of the Corps of Engineers, and for other purposes:" '-.-.'.,;--.'. .':-:',;':.''.-: Section 6. And be it further enacted, That all payments of advanced bounties to enlisted men who have I een discharged before serving out the time required by law for its payment in full, shall be allowed in the settlement of the accounts of the paymasters at the Treasury, but hereafter, in all such cases, the amount so advanced shall le charged against the enlisted men, -unless the discharge be upon surgeon's certificate for wounds received or sickness incurred since their last enlistment. It appears from the above that those soldiers who are discharged sick or wounded, are to have the benefit , of their bounty advance without deduction, and that all other discharged soldiers are to have the advance! bounty deducted from their pay at the time of final settlement. Row in Canton Ohio. The Democrats, of Stark county had a mass meeting in Canton, on the Cth inet.. Dr. Olds and Hon. G. L. Converse were the speakers. WhiIeMr. Converse was spraking an assault was made on some Democratic boys Btanding outside of the crowd. The Democrat says, 'Pistols and knives were drawn on them, and for a few minutes the oppoer of free speech were likely to prevail. But the Democratic boys soon rallied and sweept all before them, and had it not been for older heads., would have followed up their advantage, and inflicted severer chastisement upon the gettera up of mob law..- A Democrat while standing jieaeea-b!y was stabbed in the back by a Republican youth. A young Republican, when aiming a pistol at a Democrat, was hit by a stone on the nose. The blow broke his nose and knocked him down. - These are the only casualties worth mentioning." The Soldiers Want the Abolitionists to do the Fighting. A Clermont county soldier (who was a Republican when he volunteered.) now that the war has been converted by the Abolitionists into an engine to give freedom to the slave," thinks that the Abolitionists and the niggers should be compelled to do the . fighting. A most capital idea, that! The writer says : There is great excitement aWut the President's Emancipation ; Proclamation and the bill for arming the Negroes. The latter is denounced with the bitter imprecations, and all our men swear, to a man. that they will rebel and kill every negro that is brought in. - Now, for my part, if they would place the Negroes and Abolitionists in the front and make them do all the fighting, I should not care. But so long as I ha any fighting to do I do not want either of t lief e tribes in the field, for it would be a disgrace to the arms of America. When I say thev, I mean both, Negroes and Abolitionists for I have no more respect for the one than the other if any:: difference, -I abhor the Abolitionists -most. " - - Western Cotton Speculation. A St. Louis correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette, noticing certain charges against Geni Curtis (the hero of Pea Ridge, Prairie Grove, Ilartsville and Springfield,) in connection with the cotton trade, writes as follows : I mderstand that Gen. Curtis Tina ifmaiii). eti an investigation of these matters, and it is possible that the sending of Gen. Sumner' to thia department is but temporary, and that the former officer will beTeturaed oon as the investigations are aompleted. tuuu wr iijc cxaniiaaiion inio tne CO t ton trade has not yet commenced im npxiiinna Rn McDowell having failed to appear. He is ex pected nere daily. t he other officers of the court are in tbe city and awaiting the arrival ofthe senior officer. ' ! ' 'i" : 1 Prohibition' of the- Sale of . Arms in In-; ;: ;' olaiiapolis.; ; : :'' V A dispatch to the Chicago TT&r dated Indianapolis, March 17th, .says '," l..I.V,' : Genv Carrington hasv by a general . iorder, prohibited the sale of pistols, bowie knives, arms of all sorts,1 powder, weenssion oansl and lead ' The reason given; is,r that Indiana is filled with disloyalnent-and only those to whom.hjergive special perm kit canpurchase the articles above spoken of.,, This; places the implements of war all iu the bands of parties mo;TOU;iio,Ted(Pirst A.Wew, iiampentre. tiepuUicao paper un dertakes to ' say that "copperheids" will be diafted before-Repiiblrcans, and premised,' be- ure tne election, tnai tuose wnojrpiea ine republican ticket, would be safe ronothe dra fA well-founded suspicion that favoritism of Jhat kind is to' ; ba: pntcthied.-wouli convert this epantry Int a0tbey ,;' n .yi'BrdsleSpteofiut elected by tbe Blaclr 'Tr.M.Kuwi. v-. ground with f h Democracy, &s the only pont- 'b- - preserve ta e OT arament. . ' ' " - ....,...'. . Who is Besponsible for the Present War i An Elegant and Trathral Picture. The iollowing extract is from Mr. Voda-HErs late speech in New Yorki- "We copy it because it is as true as Holy -Writ r'- ' .-'f " V Mr. Voorhees read - from - the -debates In Congress, showing that Douglas said, in the Thirty-sixth Congress that , if his party had triumphed in the last election, the people of the Southern States Would have rested in the: security that they were safe, and the Union would never have been dissolved.; Washing- I ton, Jefferson, Jackson, Clay and, Webster predicted that the- result of a sectional, party ' would be disunion and civil war, and yet the Republicans are excessively sensitive about being charged as the authors of this war. I am sure, said the speaker, if I felt that the blood of this war was iu any way on my hands, or that any vote of my hand had brought into existence this thousand miles -of graves upon the borders of the South had caused this mourning of mothers for their first-born, like Rachael weeping for her children because they are not; if I thought that I was responsible by word or deed for this war, I should feel that upon my fingers was the blood, red damned spot of murder that would incarnadine great Neptune's wave, and that all the waters in the ocean would not wash out. Great applause, and "three cheers for Voorhees, the patriot" given, heartily. There would be no res pose for me this side Or the other of the grave. I would have to have a lighted candle in my room to -keep away spectators of the murdered dead slain in battle. I thank God to night, and love to look in the faces of an audience that participate iu the feel ing, that no Democrat has to take the guilt of this great crime against nature and humanity. You know' it well that if every-body . had voted as you voted, and; talked as you talked, and minded their own business as you minded yours, and let the slave States alone in sla very, and let them have the guarantees of the Constitution- who does not know: that there would have been peace and Union before today ? - The man who pretends he don't know it falsifies his own internal convictions. Every man knows it. He who stands before you : and says it is not true don't, even represent his own heart. It is an instinctive feeling in your breast, and you know it. Consequently; when you ask this question of Republicans, how anxious, nervous, and sensitive they are; ; how ouicklv thev out un their hands and sav. vLet's argue this question when the war is 'over;' it is like Banquo s ghost threatening Macleth. 1 heir eyeballs are seared by he awful eight. They afck that the day of reckoning may be postponed: like some guilty wretch upon the verge of hell ileelf. they nay, 'Forbear a few days: let us not discuss these questions npw." How loving they are with Democrats that will give them time with men who w:ll agree to say, " We will speak of these things when the war is over." Ah, gentlemen, short accounts and quick settlements are lest. tireat cheering. I propose to settle this account all aloi.g the line. It is beet to do so, because they will be asking us to trust them again directly.: How Lincoln Inculcated "Treason." It is oftenjsaid that Calhoun instilled iu-to the public mind, the doctrines from which has sprung "the heresy of secession." The following shows that the responsibility docs uot rest on Calhoun alone: Any people, anywhere, being inclined and havingthe power, have the right to rise up and shake of the existing-Government, and form anew one that suits them better. This is a most valuable, a most sacred right a right which, we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. A'or is this right confined to case in which the whole people of an existing Government may choose lo exercise it. As v portion of such people that can mav revolutionize and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit. More than this: a majority of any portion of such people may revolu lionize; putting down a minority intermingled with or near about them, who may oppose their movements. Such minority was precisely the case of the Tories of our own revolution. It is a quality of revolutions not to go by old lines or old laws, but to break up both and make new ones. Extract from J'resid'ent JAncoln's speech in the House of Representative", January 12A, 1848. See Appendix to Congress sional Globe, first session, Thirtieth Congress, page A Great Outrage on the Tapis in Co- lumbns. ; ..- : ; Yesterday Mr. Dressel, one of the Representatives from the county of Franklin, offered a series of resolutions iu the Ohio House of Representative. They are substantially those adopted by the Democracy of Connecticut, at their State Convention at "Hartford, : a few weeks ago, which resolutions - were published in the Enquirer at the time. The resolutions will be indorsed by the people of Connecticut, at the coming April election, by the choice of the Democratic ticket by a large majority . These resolutions, which are thus approved by a New England State, were made the occasion of a gross Insult to the ' principle of a representative Government.- One1 West, of Logan county, who was defeated for Congress io his district last fall, who is repudiated by the people, had the audacity to, offer a resolution expelling Mr, Dressel from his .seat, for favoring the resolution of the people of Connecticut. We do not recollect of such a proposal ever Wing offered to a legislative body as that of West. If it should be adopted, tt would be a terrible blow at representative popular Government..; Jfihema,orityTcan expel a minority because they do not like their . sentiments, then onr legislative bodies are a.gross humbug, and we shall never have another one entire in Ohio. , The Ohio Legislature has as much right to make a King, aa they have to expel MrvDresel-for bis resolutions., ,Tbe idea that the fastidious majority shouldlbraud as " disloyal" resolutions that are approved by , th people of such a State s Connecticut, is rich extremely so I ,;We wait, the upshot of ibis matter with great interest.;. H the Ohjo Legislature can't stand upon the .platfbriu. of Connecticut, it bad better at once com home and go to Africa. . Ohio more extreme, than Coneciicnt-that ia a good joke 1CineiMaU 1 Francia P.- Blair, the Father of the Prea-! ent Pbstmaater iGexieral, Vpdn the Free- 'dota'of.th'e-Presi: -' v-; ; . "MPa, no PQssiBta axiauavcr, xoiTxYtv ""oOEAMlDTIIE THROES OF CIVIL ,WAR, eoa.tAi Ctopemment fystjfy official tnterfitrew i freedom of;$peeck or oj we press iT noas THAN IT CAN wiTHc,IH raiKDOM orjjutBAJUtpt.iJrha.. licentiousnesa or the tongue and of ibe pen is ,a Ktvoa fttit. COXPAUD WITH TB LICXNTI0CSNSS9 Or AK9I- faaar rowaa." F. B. Blair senior. : iThe.kboaiJ editorial article,, which, appeared in the Wwh- isgtoo Glo&, when U was edited by- FaANdis P. ExAia,ln the days of Jxcisoss'-'Adiaii)i- ;'-t&? English meq-bf-war nayeptured lbree slavers on be-eoaab ,of, Africaj 'j. je" Garibaldi haa.issujpd.an apppeal to Europe, the burden of which is "-Donot abandou1 poiandrv, :;j".:.;-,t1:.,:,: M&t.Gen. Scbenek hasi issued : an order for bidding the sale of secession tuuaie in the city of Baltimore, i huu": -,:'. ; . .; S&- Hon. Joh'tt W-. Noetli.of Missouri, member, of the late House ' ot Representatives, has just died. ' . .- .' ' .'; ; ; I Tbe Spanish O'Dbnnell cabinet dissolved on the 26 of Feb. Duero ia the new' Pres ident of the Council." :i - - ; ; ::': ' jSQr The.Governor of Wisconsin has-received urgent requests for more medical aid lor the troops before Vicksburg. ' ! . . aT Thad. rttevens was rotten-egged on his return to his constitnents ra Lancaster, Pa. after the adjournment of Congress. aThe Pittsburg Gazette says that troops are going Westward, supposed to be for the re-inforcement of Rcsecraus. ' " ': ' It is. reported that a son of old Aloli- tlOll -i saint, John . Brown, has been hunz at Vicksburg. :t ' ",;.'-:-: '-... t&m 'The President has approved of the sentence of the Court-martial to shoot soldiers for desertion. - , ST"The Quakers of Indiana have paid two hundred and fifty thousand dollars into the U. S. Treasury for exemption from military duty. JtfaS Accordiug to the Van Wyck report, the income of the Collector of the port of N. York for one year will be $lirt,508".51. Paris and London are said to be full of women of rank intriguing against any interference wth "the settlement of the Polfahrebellion.- ' . ". ;- t&m Washington dispatch reports the Government hard at work selecting officers for the execution of the Conscription act. . The Hagerstown (Md.) . Press has been suppressed by order of General Schenck, and its editor, Mr. A. J. Boyd, sent beyond the federal lines. ,; J" Parson Brownlow realize! from the sale of his book, within ninety days, over $17,000, which sum whs paid over) to him by his pub-liher,.Geo. W. Child. , ; t he ?SMwbuck Rangers" are a boly of men in uraini Kapids, A1k-u., who go round and saw wood for women whose supporters are at war. . ,j, . . , S& A considerable amount of.real estate in Cincinnati, belonging u Albert, Win.-A. and Thom8 J, Jenkins, oflSeers iri the rebel army, has been seized by the TX & Marshal. 4 The Louisville Journal says: Our State is a unit in itn devotioii' to the Union cause, and the great principles which are involved in passing events. f-V! V ' IS?" A tiger got out oft; his cage and took a leisurely-walk in Cinciijpikti lately, frightening a woman badly . by trying to get into her kitchen., ; ! '' 1 . B-Gerrit Smith has contributed $500 to-; ward raisins a regiment of negro troops in Mas-i sachusetts, and offers $3000 more for the sanie purpose in New York. B The anniversary of Washington's birthday was celebrated in London by a banquet at St. James' Hall, at which over one hundred persons were present. The rebel Gen. Longstreet's headquarters are at Petersburg: Va. He has eighteen thousand troops twelve tuiles tLis side, near the Black water. A" special to the Detroit Free Press says Gen. Bnrnside is again in command of the Otli Army Corps, having arrived at Newport News on the Cth inst. 8 The Richmond Examiner contains the announcement that Gen. Beauregard has revo ked all futloughi and recalled the absentees to their. posts. .; ; t& A correspondent of the Allen Co. Democrat urges the nomination of Hon. Allen G. Thurmanas the Democratic candidate forGovr ernor of Ohio. : jB Charter elections just held at Rock Island, IU., and Davenport and Muscatine, Iowa, have gone m favor of the Democrats. Revo lutions never go backward. . . t& The President baa appointed Andrew Wylie a Judge of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, notwithstanding his re jection, by the Senate. XNin"tbousan"d pounds of lint and bandages have been collected in Frankfort on the Main, Germany, and forwarded to this country for the use of the wounded Union soldiers. . : J Three members of. the Pittsburgh bar nave been stricken from the list of practising attorneys because they neglected to take out licenses as required by the internal revenue law- ; ' - ; . ;" - -' ISF Gen: Grant has ordered all resigned of- ueers and discharged soldiers to leave the department of the Mississippi., as, oa examination, the cotton disease has been discovered on many of them. : ':. " .' : '. ;.r : JTbe Government, it is reported, contemplates establishing at Washington or Annapolis, a cam p of instruction for 100,000 men an indication of a purpose to put in force the con- SCriptiou laWrl . ';;,- ; ., .... M&" The Chattenooflr Rebel states that the wife of Gen. John C Breckinridge baa made a set of colors from her wedding dress, to be pre sented to the bravest regiment.in ber husband's division.,. . .. ; -. : .. . .'. ' ;' t The Portland Press, like other niggfr-headpapersi has been calling every Democrat a rebel. But its noisv mouth' will be stopped for the present by lbel auit and an" attach-went of $10,000.' : ?--.- ;. ,:k.w-..;.. ; ; WST Gen. WHgbt has prohibited the sale of arms' and; ammunition ' in Cincinnati, excebt ""POu.special permit. Any' violation will be foilowed-hy confiscation of goods and stock of the vendor. " . ; ' .. v ! , t A rebel lleufenanf, capfufel in vicinity of Charleston, says that Becret pegotuitions for Ejace have been progressing for three weeks at iebmoud, but the papers are 'not' allowed, to aiiude to the fact i, ur ' 'r 'i. We learubU Con o ty,. subpoenaed Governor Tod laifweek to appear on Monday next, before the Grand Jn rrofl bat' county, to testify, iulregard to the ai5-MrPrOIds.SST Tlie officer who called the roll of tbe paroled Federal soUira4a-Houston, Texaa, was Lieut. Todd; brother .of Airs. Lincoln, who is discribed as uU, fat, and aavage again tbe Yankeeal'V -. ' y . ?Ji I ..l-". ! ' I f t3 The receni" draft in MTcbigan caused qnite a" livery migration? io Canada." From Clinton county, the St. Jonn's ipuaatitaes, out oforfywis-wbtf'wMa drafted.'not over one-third tii within tha 6beri2a graspV4 VI i' "tcf'lni"ce'trteJ' beiofeiJu3geCrferJ,x in Philadelphia'; he decided that if rebels on- land were treated as prisoners cf war, rebels on the sea were entitled to the Sne w: z and were therefore act eaiject io th penalties of f iracy. Tit fieutUxat or tbe New Ealsuicl -? "shfTi'si 3cxatoeinae7'' .i.x-o-Va tr" ThePoUUcal.f Can W ,: ia, . qoncQticut. storation' of the Union by Peaceful :.! t-,- . .-,..! in Means - -j M- S E E E G H HON, TEOHAS H. SEYMOUR, DEMOCRATIC, (CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR -V I ' OF. . COJfJiECTICUT, At 'Harfjfrd, on Wednesday Evening March 11. ; . From the New Ilaveo (Conn.) RegUter. J Gintlivbx : When I came leforeyou some time since, I spoke to you of the duty which it seemed to. me devolveit upon us "in the present crisis, and I spoke also of the events which bad brought this crisis upon . ua.; - At that time I stood before yon in the capacity of one of the rank and file. ' Applause: Since then I have been promoted to a place on rour State ticket.' This is a ereat honor. I can assure you, and one wjiljh Xmosthighly.appreciate, and not the lesaVo on" ac'-bttnt of'tbe trials it brings with it. - Whatever iltee trials may be,.I give you my word, fellow-citizens, that I shall bear them without a murmer. In entering upon the struggle which is before us, and which it is manifent.'' to 'be a severe one,' I am not to forget that U-'is boause of mine, btlt it is your cause, and mine and yours together Applause.- And lielieviog U tq be. jufit and upright,' I can uot for a ntomeirt believe that there is to be any failure alout it - Cheers.. The voice that conies on a breeze to us from New Hampshire cheers tell ,ns, -"We have done what we could for the cause, and it id for you now t take up that cause and carry it on and cover yourselves with imperishable glory.' Great applause.; .-;,'.,- -: . Gentleiiien, I have spoken on the, '-c.rius. in our affairs. The world has' never seen one exactly like' it.- Our rights J have been taken a way by. arbitrary power. , The sword and bludgeon have been called in to effect . these most wicked outrages. What have we to. oppose them ? The ballot only ; but the ballot is mightier-than kings. Applause. The poet has well described how it , ' . "As lightly tallf An snow-flakes full upon tbe sod,' ' ' ' ;"; But executes a fremaa'8 wilL M.;r : - As lightning doe the will of God Great cheering. : ' - :'..'---.-.' .- Nov my friends, what ia requrred of us at this juncture of our affairs ? 1 address myself t nd isc r i m i n at el y . t o al 1 t h ose w h o ha y e en 1 is t ed under our banner to those who have enlisted under our Itanner for the vigorous proecutidn of peace. Great applause. 'is What is required of us, I say ? 'Perfect freedom of speech, abnegation of self, elf-positessiony steadinetu of purpose, and a firm an analterable resolution to stand by the Constitution and the laws. Well now, your declarations, my friends, in regard to these ereat objects of your party or ganization, as expressed iri the prbceeiinga of your convention, have raised a storm about your heads, and it is raging at tbe present time. I am glad that is so. ' I seein the very fury of the gale the means of "ileliyeranceJ Applaui-e. Gentlemen. I crossed the Black Sea once in a fearful tempest a tempest that sent thewavea chasing after us like so many fiends ; but it was the wild winds that drove away the mist then along the coast, and opened to our view the anchorage of the Bospho-rus. If it had not been for the gale, we might have drifted toward "the .Asiatic coast and leen caught between the Sy m plegades. Now, the rage of man is as the raging sea, and those that fear either will not do. to pursue the leviathan under the tropics,: or to grapple with the hvdra of Federal A lolitionisni. Applause." '-: ' '''' . . Gentlemen, the "doings of voiir convention have .my hearty approval. They have calleil out all the bitterness of the opposition. Now. it is lamentable that there should t so much bitterneHs at the present day," .but" I suppose that it cannot very .'well : be helped. -: J f. you and tkose. associated with you in drafting your resolutions had glossed. oyer the atrocious doings of. the men in power, If you had compromised with your1 consciences anil found an excuse here aud an apology there for what had been done, you : might .'have passed muster with the men in power, and been voted" patriots of the second water, if not of the first. But my friends, it is better as it is. Who noble ends by noble means would obtain should not count the Cost of the struggle. ' Who would win the crown mnst first wrestle with wild beasts at Ephesus, and I therefore rejoice that you have taken your stand in favor of Slate rights and constitutional rights, and that you are determined to maintain these. Applause. .Do this, and you shall recover your liberties. (Great applause. ; . Fail to do this, and you will be crushed between, the upper and nether mill-stone. Now, gentlemen, another thing; ince you have coine out thus boldly, as yoa have done, the old talk is reviving here h (his community ahont loyal aixl disloyal, and testa of this kind are applied to one and another in the community. ' ' " ' Now, those who use these Words, ' in ; scorn or in hatred of you, either do not know tbe true, origin and application of these words, or they are troubled - with . what is called . the King's Evil.".- Laughter. . Sir. what have loyal or disloyal lojdo with our ; institutions ? They.,are hot indlgineoca to otir soil, any more than the Canada thistle or the deadly Upas. When the Americans east off' the British yoke, they banquishel the Words loyal" and Vdis teyal," from our political bible. . They are not to be found either in the Constitution of ypur country or in the M psalm" of Jefferson - and liberty."-; But I will tell yon where you mar find : them t . In .the proclamations, of Xccd Hqwc, and Cornwallisp and Clinton - and in their orders which gave the Jersey's and the Carolinas to fire and sword : and if you look furtlier, you may pneaibl-r-find ;tbein: in 'the .death-Warrant: which . consigned the . martyt Hale to an ignominious crave. vWe-. are not called upon to jndu.lJLnahyJJsuch "language as this. Devotion to the Constitution end the Union of onrwuntfy is the setftiment of our heart, and is all that we- are Called 'upon to render. i As for those other words of treason? and ";.traitor,,,,i which political. ; hatred le eon stantjy casting -lo Jtbe faces of patriotic, libertyr loving'men; they are of little pr no account excepiinsr when the Ivine tongue may expose mine Jadi vidua! to odium br positive injury. t I n each case :let the ! traducers . beware.- : Unt, my mends, asam, the doingr or your Convention have ralseXa clamor in . this and other communities, the . amount bf which - is that you are about ta inangnrate a civili war hi the country; Now, then we will take care that there shall be .no: civil, war applause, and we will take care; that the people, have their rights,! Great applause'. Whomever heard of peace measures proyoking5 war -and bloodshed ? i'Tbese tnen.T fear, are I trouble! with distempered fancies: - They bave bad o much to do with tlood-lettinjr that it seerns to hare decolored ererythin about them: If thev recall the mission of Wiliiara';Tenn they wil be apt tq conclude that peace mearurea. alter all, are aot eo very bad. - When he came to the banka of the Delaware; 1t waa a wild country. ;Tbere- he found a war-like tribe 1 who had been, butchering each other,, time out of mind; scalping each other, knocking out each other's brains. ; War lo them was a pastime, and blood tbe incense of their lives. The story ie a touching one. A grave man, animated by the true spirit oi philauthrophy, went ia among tbe redjnen and talked lo them as a, friend.' -. He got them together in council; be breathed into them something of the divine principle of charity was in him.- They listened to him as cue sent ty the Great Spirit, end all at once he held them, as! it were, in the hollow of bis band. . Involuntarily- they laid down, their arms, they buried the hatchet and forever alter ceased to make:, war , upon each other, ' . . ; . '-.. : But these men that have traduced jou, ypar principles and your intentions, have conveyed the idea, or sought to convey the idea, that, if the Democratic party, could get power as I have no doubt they are about" to do this great cheering the laws are to be overturned, A h I it is a libel on a great,- and . numerous, and patriotic party. Their history is that of a law-abiding party, as you, gentlemen, both of you (turning to Mr. Toucey and Mr, Eaton,) very well know. If the old Whig party. were in existence, they would tell : you so. They will do nothing when in power, either to grieve the living or sully the memory of tbe dead. . Let our conservativefellow-citi-aens, mea of property, give no heetl to rumors aiw declarations of this sort, but believe that, in UiCj, event of any such triumph of the. party to- which, JL refer, the. la we will be maintained, and that equal and exact justice will be meted out to meu.ofjalIpartie8,aml.sectsr- and pur-suasions. Great.-apoIauseJ . , r , Another.! lung.. 4 They, talk to ns .pf .Gov- ernmeiu, , 4.hev wl efnmfii.i ii means., .ir.it means , sjiy thing at alli'that we are to support this "Administra tion right or .$rong; ril that IdOjiqt intend to do. Great cheering- ; t.canV'seerwheu' we can make a distinction between wbui is-callel the uoi-erninent and what is done' outside of Government. There are several kinds of government. There is that of the Sultan of Turkey. a.Governnwnt of the one man power-He may'send his niiites with tlje bow-string to throttle thoe whom he fears .or bates, or he may tie up his. women in sacks and throw them into the - Bosphorus. There are other government whose meo-ia power act independent, qfany law, exceU the law oi; their pwp breathy and a higher law, which is not known to patriots."'' Theif there 'is the" constituttonal form of govern tfient, -"under which I Was born, w'hich; I ; hare ; supported,- a nd under, which, when. my. time cpm.es. I . would wish to;die-JApplause. iKow, although. .the Sultaq "of Til r key may do what he 'pleases "withoutbe'"? called to account forit," there is no'such Immunity for a ruler - under ' a republican form-of government. Whatever is done in accordance with the Constitution of the United States is the Government and a portion of bur national life, and whatever is done contrary to that Consti tntion is no Government at alC' such as our fathers. established, but a wicked usurpa tion. v (Cheers. J . W here are we at the present day ? '.All the most valuable rights of the citizens, those especially that are set forth in the twelve amendments of the Constitution, have been swept away by the "men inpow'er,"and to day.. L. lament to be obliged to say .' it, to. day we are living under a different form of government than - that? which our fathers founded and sealed with their blood. Our remedy for present ftbnses is not in revolution ary proceedings, tmt : in the exercise of the right oi ballot of which. I have just spoken. Now. gentlemen, 1 see. around me quite a numtier ot naturalized citizens, and 1 wish to say a few' words to them. The time has come when we may speak plainly to each other. I ak you, my friendei, what' induced you to this country? To escape tyranny." . 4 Don't think in e impertinent for asking you the question and givinyou .the answer to t myself. Why did von leave the Khrme and the Rhone and the borders of Lake Geneva? - Why did vou leave Neufehate) and Constance? Why did you leave the Elbe and the Scheldt ami the Hagus? Why did you leave the sunny Italy, the scene of civil war for more than a hundred years, and why the vine-clad hills of France?: Why did vou leave Caledouia, " stern and wild." and sweet lakes that nestle in the bosom of hills? Why did you leave Killarnev and Kilkenny, and those consecra ted places where Curran and G rattan thunder- , ' . . T . 1 1 T . I. -J ea against nppremon, anu wuere iimmn miu down bis life? Applause. Why did you leave the graves of your kindred in the rath erland, "the God's acre"; of Germany, and the church-yards of the United Kingdom? Why did you leave the historic scenes of the Old World, where the Roman, tbe Northman, and the blue-eyed Goth have been, and where they have left the iiaprects of their moral power, or of brute ; lorce cenes w here. A have . sometimes stood, as it were, entranced, till I seem ed to be incorporated with the pa?t, while the ages surged by me? 1 Why" did you leave the bright, the beautiful, the tender, the touch ing, the sublime why did you leave all .these tor.the New. World?. Better, perhaps. I have sometimes inongut in tnese days ot trial, that the good ship in which you embarked had been stranded en the French, tbe German, ; or the Irish coat, and yon plucked from he remorseless wave not leas; cruel and remorseless tha"n;the. wrath of map-bave retnmed to your native villagn. there to Uke up the burr den of life again; better this than that you should have come here just to taste the sweets of liberty, and all at once' bare the cup dashed from yoeHips.i Applause.? : . - . .-; I, And now formy answer, ;? Yo.q. came . here to get rid of unjust law. of odious taxes "that take frt)b; the'ojouth of labor'the bread which; it has earned,"4d getxISTor iarge-v armies and navies nareatTux tne suoscance ot xueJ people; lo get Hd iof Mantp actsr and conscription mctt to be rid-of Provost Marshals, andgame-keeperaand bum bsjliffs. tbe instruments of tne ironyuie. lureat applause.- jcou came hither fo get 'nd oi.aivile syetem..of -espionage for which otiiblanguagBbas no'name, ' arid"'to! get'rid Of tbe passport system ' that stope yooi at every frontier town.tiTl ;yohr";passport can be'yised'and Stamped. 'Vou- came iwbere speech waajfree and tb press free; where there, was trial bVJnry; where labor. . waV honored; an.d man; the lprd of his little patch of ground j Or it mnf be, ef bis acres, could take hie -ehib, dreo jn-biraruSa and thank God that, he was loru ia land of, freedom j Great : cheering. This, is what you. .came, for, And , vou" came wherei civil and religious liberty; had found an asylum, and reared her temples to justice abd to the worship of the living God.-VBot; men of foreigo-landj.yoawherH I-have sometimes welcomed to oar shores; 'LT aro ibonnd,' to till you that in some thiu" you have been misled lately, deceived1, beguiled, and cast, as it were, into the horrille pit,'"Io7;the last . vesr a yearwh'ch "o-its violation ot personal iI,i3 aud -dleregard of corsJitational ctliations, should be stricken frop the calender the ci?n in power disregarding tLe rights of the rcja under tbe Constitution, have struck oc,'ia . say , vou. must, support the vernment. oir. I undent mk! nerfectlv well i at is meant by 'this cryV Support the Gov- a succession of oiitrn, I1ai m... right which you have acquired here, aud the r o . j . bare renewed here in Onr' Country some of the worst featurea,. ot the rotten) dy nasties ofo- t - ropean auu vsiauo coontri.es. -- Ana now, gentlemen, your remedy in In tnnr Awn hanrta - : United together, 'and firm in your purpose, Vhl, . . L . , t 1 , ' jv" recover iok which you . save lost, and recover these inevitable privileges in ' constitutional way. c-r. -".,--."'.' uentiemen of the different clnba for rUD-poee you are reniMni.l i. t . organization the noble impulse, the patriotio pnrpw.es, the holy aspiration and heroic resolve which have characterized the true friend of liberty in all ages of tbe world. Your late tyiHcuiiuu was , remaraauie one. Every town in the State wa n.n.ni tl:. il . - ja a a a, Uta mm something which has never occurred before. XT I . I i . r . , - n w iu explanation a oimcuit one. xivery town has suffered more or less, by.the war. Exery town has seen on the edge of its horizon the shadows of some" coming despotism! Every-town has eiven something of the flow of its . youth to the causes Some have re turned criDhled for life; At he rat n a va rnA Klr - to tell the story of how they were treated by iuubc wuu auuaiu nave pecn to mem irienos and protectors. 'Every : town ; is loaded with taxes.- In all of them there ia mnn m leak mourn in ir. . Rachel innin r. and refusmir to be comforted hnan the r are not; and all of, this misery, desolation, burthen and omreaa?nn fnr tK f .t;! w - v m mm w waatflat Va "aVS a W cal Abolitionism." fApplaose.l Now. gentlemen, a word or two more and I have done. What is tbe mission of tbe hour? It 18 to IDeak (tnl: Unit cnaalr r.1a!.l. - I I only that, but to speak the whole truth; and If aAn Jm. at.!. 1 . i juu uu .uia, jou nay say mat we have gone far enough in a unprofitable and cruel struggle. "It. is .time to sheath the sword and spare mankind.": Great cheering "Already have our quarrels filled tbe world with widows and orphans." But perhaps you may say .to me some of you we. are to gain by this StrniTCfle. And therefnr it all uain what? Ifyou eonauer the South. ou have got to keep an army there to hold them, ia Subri aeat nn. And pay for itK : If you , devastate the South and turn the African loose, you destroy that Portion 'of VOu'r country whih Wna borne market, and convert it into' a desert. ie it liberty that jou aie to gain?, t Alas Kray friends, you have well ni?h by permitiingthe military to .override the civ? 11 power": Depend upon it, in such a contest as this at the present time, there can be but one end, and that will be despotism fori yourselves and -your, children. The bnlv hope ia in & return to mirnl vm,,ao1. . V. n .1 V, fro forth from' one end nf tl Tan.t ik. 43 Mfmj fcajag VbUw er, we have bad enough of thia death struggled -::::A ' : I,,"..- :- J . P11? wal to be done,, they may. say,- after ypu get a-cessation of bostilities? "We can not perhaps, penetrate the future and be able. to' see et this nioment what can brehould be done. But allay the, passions which war engenders, aud we shall be at no loestofind away. God help ua, ..Applause. It is not bv force oi. arms that we are to have another Union, but, by force of reason.-r Reason hides' herself in these ilaya, a poor, naked, shivering thing, a-mid thepeltingof the storm-' Go toyoatarmy :nd th y will i!l you they have had enough' ot slaughter. Braveueu will tell you. tbisV There has has not - one.-battle been since the war begun, whether; in their favor or agathst them, that doubts have notariaen in their mindi as to the possibility; of conquering the South.' Some of them remember what Chatham said of the rebellious colonies. : . They could not forgeW! either, nor should we forget, that the men on' the other side of the "rhvidious fine" are ot1 our own kindred also, and, reflecting on these things, these men of wlvom I am. speaking who aret many of them, looking toVConnectr cut and hoping for a Democratic triumph here Applause these men began to doubt the morale of the war." Is it for freedom, or is it (he work of Cain in a multiplied, vast, and fear-; ful form? The pulpit may push it on, but the words of Christ shall rebuke the pulpit's thunder "Blessed are the peace-makers, for they shall be called the children Of God." Tremendous Applause. - ; - . . Gentlemen, I congratulate you on this out-, poring of the Democracy of the Valley of the Conrtecticut, and on tbe pleasure we have bad listening to a gentleman (Mr. Toucey), who ia an honor to our native State. Great cheering The shafts of the opposition have been cast a-gainst him in yain, and he stands before us to night the true and tried" Triend of Con-stitutioual liberty, of the Union and of hts country cheers: and the speech- which be has given us on this occasion shall outlive the malice of h is detractors, 1 and form a bright" chapter in his unsullied history. Great cheering. And, recalling what baa been said in injury of him, and the attacks which have beeln made upon our friends for the part . they, hare taken in the struggle of the last few months and, in consideration of the change - in public opinion that is going on around us, 'I call to mind the language of favorite poet: . s ThoBgb thoesbts brood o'e the part, oar eyae o With smiling features glUten , i - n For Io! our day bants j tn ekj! ,-- 1 1 ' '. - " Lean oat your seoLi a(t liabjo.' : . f ' . '. '. - - The world rotli freedom's jjufient ware, " ' And ripens with ber sorrow. " ,..---.;Eop heart who bear tbe eross.to-day - . Shall wear the ctown to-morrow." : - '' ' ' - - i- . .. - .. . : , jOreat and continued cheering. : , Tlie chairman then steppe! forward with yery pretty boqu'et in bis band, received from' two young ladies in the aulience as patriot-' ie as they were beaut Uul-r-and presented it io' Covernof Seymonr, with the remark: ,.r .,.f-- "I am reouested lv" "BOnie vnnnir ladlea tn the house to tender you this boquet. io the Inll and confident belief that before the flowers fade, voa will benefited .a.uo niming wijoerneu wim three cheers for the Consthuuori and the Union, three 'cheer for Mr. Toucry.'and thefee1i:i wi....if uorerngr oi voaaecticut." . i- .-. T, - J A regular live Atnertoan Varta mm mjt classic fame and iheaiaiionaJ emblem of liber-ty b-a found its way to abis city.' and baa leeii purchased by "one of our prominest iti-teua, forjresenttion to the Milwaakee Denv-oeratioCfabi -The bead of the-Urd-i8 shi-" ning cbpr dor; hdliejmam-ea; eight iet - from tinio tin Tha . nrMD t Lirtn ' nf . arlilrK due notice will be giveo, is .to bacebmpaaied! J -"V..V. ewaira V UW I. U4 VIA Mst. V4 bUVUi - tDTbe Manchester fjN.il.) i-ror,nepuV; lican. expresses the opinion that CoJ. J...SU " CheDey, the Democrat candidate for Eillr; X . Com mission et,' is elect ed. AS there "were lit 1 two candidates for thia o See. this - resist -w;.T afTorlj perhap. the mostdecUive.t:;S cf.Ci pouiic? cf the.Siate. C61. "iTarnes B. Fry, cf tLe rtj Ute of Euerastafr I'.a t;ra x ; - ' rt-.Vsrs'.&I Cerrr- '.r t1- C law, and U to rr-h ; ta t --cistzic his suboruT&aXa c-lc. i. - " ' t